Plane skids off Manila runway, engine, wheel ripped off

Plane skids off Manila runway, engine, wheel ripped off

The Xiamen Air plane, flight 8667, rests on the grass off the side of the runway at Ninoy Aquino International Airport after it made a bad landing in heavy wain early  Friday morning. All the passengers and crew were safe.(AP photo)
The Xiamen Air plane, flight 8667, rests on the grass off the side of the runway at Ninoy Aquino International Airport after it made a bad landing in heavy wain early Friday morning. All the passengers and crew were safe.(AP photo)

MANILA: A plane arriving from China veered off a runway at Manila's airport while landing in a downpour around midnight then became stuck in the mud with one engine and a wheel ripped off before the 165 people on board scrambled out through an emergency slide, officials said on Friday.

Four passengers sustained scratches. All others aboard Xiamen Air Flight 8667 were unhurt. They were taken to an passenger terminal, where they were given blankets and food before going to a hotel, airport general manager Ed Monreal told a news conference. 

The Boeing 737 from China's coastal city of Xiamen was making its second landing attempt after pulling away from the first, apparently because of poor visibility, director-general of the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines Jim Sydiongco told reporters.

The plane circled before landing on its second attempt, but then lost contact with the airport tower, Sydiongco said.

"We think that when (it) landed, the plane swerved to the left and veered off the runway,'' general manager Monreal said, expressing relief that a disaster had been avoided.

"With God's blessing all passengers and the crew were able to evacuate safely and no injuries except for about four who had some superficial scratches.''

Reuters video


The aircraft appeared to have "bounced'' in a hard landing then veered off the runway and rolled toward a rain-soaked grassy area with its lights off, Eric Apolonio, spokesman of the civil aviation agency said, citing an initial report about the incident.

Investigators retrieved the plane's flight recorder and will get the cockpit voice recorder once the aircraft has been lifted to determine the cause of the accident, Sydiongco said.

Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Manila's main international gateway, will be closed most of Friday while emergency crews remove excess fuel then try to lift the aircraft, its belly resting on the muddy ground, away from the main runway, which was being cleared of debris, officials said.

A smaller runway for domestic flights remained open, they said.

TV footage showed the plane slightly tilting to the left, its left badly damaged wing touching the ground and its landing wheels not readily visible as emergency personnel, many in orange overalls, examined and surrounded the aircraft. One of the detached engines and landing wheels lay a few metres away.

A Xiamen Air representative, Lin Hua Gun, said the airline will send another plane to Manila to resume the flight.

Several international and domestic flights have been cancelled or diverted due to the closure of the airport, which lies in a densely populated residential and commercial section of metropolitan Manila. Airline officials initially said the airport could be opened by noon but later extended it to four more hours.

Hundreds of stranded passengers jammed one of the three airport terminals due to flight cancellations and diversions. Dozens of international flights were cancelled or either returned or were diverted elsewhere in the region, officials said.

Torrential monsoon rains enhanced by a tropical storm flooded many low-lying areas of Manila and northern provinces last weekend, displacing thousands of residents and forcing officials to shut schools and government offices. The weather has improved with sporadic downpours.

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